Globalization and the Concept of Subsistence Wages
Walter Block,
Jerry Dauterive and
John Levendis
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Walter Block: Loyola University New Orleans, USA
Jerry Dauterive: Loyola University New Orleans, USA
John Levendis: Loyola University New Orleans, USA
Chapter 2 in Labor Economics from a Free Market Perspective:Employing the Unemployable, 2008, pp 9-23 from World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd.
Abstract:
AbstractAccording to Malthus, there is an “Iron Law” for wages: they cannot stay above subsistence levels. When they do, increased population soon enough pushes them down to the previous level of immiseration. One might think that modern economics has long ago confined such views to the dustbin of history, however, belief in the “Iron Law” has made a comeback in this era of globalization. We argue that all versions of the Iron Law, new and old, are vulnerable to a knock-out critique. We argue that the Iron Law of Wages, and slavery for production and profit, are logically incompatible: if one ever existed, the other cannot.
Keywords: Labor; Unions; Economics; Wages; Race; Sex; Discrimination; Unemployment; Immigration (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008
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